Beatle Lou wrote:It is the best album of all time, hands down. It probably drove John crazy that arguabably the 2 best Beatle records were more Paul and George flavored than John (Revolver and Abbey Road). We know Lennon disliked ABBEY ROAD but had he ever really commented on REVOLVER????

I find Revolver the most equal album. They both contribute 5 knock-out tracks each. Don't find it more Paul-flavoured at all.

May sweet memories of friends from the pastAlways comes to you, when you look for them

I also think Revolver is equally shared among the three geniuses. John's songs, She Said She Said, I'm Only Sleeping, Doctor Robert, Tomorrow Never Knows, And Your Bird Can Sing, have never, and will never, be bettered. Same goes for Paul's songs and George's (particularly Taxman). That's why it's head and shoulders above anything else out there. It is in a different league from anything else and it urinates copiously on everything else.

Greatest album cover EVER!! haha I think this album is amazing because George brings the indian influence into Love You To which was really important and Good Day Sunshine sounds very Pepper to me so I think you can see them starting to go into the future ooooo haha you can see them starting to change the world

EddieV wrote:We all know that Paul is playing the lead guitar on Taxman. Do you think he made up the solo on this or was told by Harrison??

Isn't the story with most of the tracks where Paul plays lead guitar that George would be spending hours working out a precise solo and Paul would wing in and just knock something great up off the cuff?

May sweet memories of friends from the pastAlways comes to you, when you look for them

Great, fantastic, incredible album. We all know that in this album they stopped touring and decided to take a break, which they deserved, but it would have been wonderful to have The Beatles performing songs from Revolver, if not in a concert maybe in some TV show or special. Maybe an acoustic version of I'm only sleeping or Here, there and everywhere, Eleanor Rigby with real strings and two rockers, She said, she said and Taxman.